For eight years, Philadelphia lived under a mayor who rarely disguised how much the job drained him. Jim Kenney often sounded like a man counting the days until his exit. He once summed it up with brutal clarity: “I’d be lying if I didn’t say I’m tired. This job will age you faster than dog years.” Grammar aside, that wasn’t an offhand quip — it was a worldview. Philadelphians felt it.

By the end of his second term Kenney delivered the line that encapsulated his entire public posture: “I don’t know why anyone would want to be mayor after this.”

Then came Cherelle Parker, a leader who arrived with the emotional wattage of a stadium spotlight. In her early days she made a declaration that would have been unthinkable coming from Kenney: “I want people to say: ‘That mayor loved this city.’ Because I do.”

“I feel blessed to serve. Blessed and ready.” — Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker

Yes, others have written about Parker’s policy plans, her crime agenda, her Kensington strategy, her transition team. They’ve noted the tonal shift too, but always as a supporting paragraph, never the thesis. They analyze the “how.” But Philadelphia is a place where the “how” only becomes possible when someone first delivers the “why.”

And that’s where leadership tone becomes central, not superficial.

Parker: the Mayor who shows up like she’s ready to play

Cherelle Parker speaks, walks, and governs like someone who genuinely loves Philadelphia — and believes it can be better, not just managed. Her inaugural letter declared: “We will make Philadelphia the safest, cleanest, and greenest big city in the nation.”

Her election-night statement radiated the same clarity: “I feel blessed to serve. Blessed and ready.”

Parker makes people feel like Philadelphia is a project worth lifting together — not a problem to survive.

Belief is the spark — execution is the work

Belief is the spark, not the finish line. Then Jason Kelce’s line at the Super Bowl parade becomes the second rule of Philadelphia leadership: “Put your head down and work … Block out the noise.”

Philadelphia requires both: the mayor who can make citizens believe their government believes; and the mayor who refuses to flinch once the critics, the interests, and the objections pile up.

Every mayor who accomplished something big in this city paired those two muscles.

Rendell believed the city could come back, made us believe it — and then stared down a fiscal crisis to make it real.

Following Rendell’s success with downtown and the Avenue of the Arts, Mayor John Street believed neighborhoods deserved revival — and pushed his Neighborhood Transformation Initiative through walls of resistance. He literally changed the landscape of North Philadelphia and East Falls by knocking down the high rise towers of the past.

My father, Mayor William Green — with a bigger deficit than faced by Rendell — balanced the budget in his first six months with real sacrifices from city workers by bringing the public along with him. He championed, and Harrisburg approved, a new convention center, including financing; this includes the train barn and much of it as exists today. Most importantly, he focused on calming race relations and inclusivity after eight years of Mayor Frank Rizzo.

Cheerleading gets people believing. Discipline delivers results.

Philadelphia rewards the leaders who can do both.

Ya gotta believe

Belief is the starting point of every Philadelphia resurgence. And whether you love Parker’s agenda or not, you can’t deny the difference in how we all feel. Philadelphia again has a mayor who looks like she wants to be here, who sounds like she’s proud to represent this place, and who talks about the city in the language of belief rather than burden.

In Philadelphia — where faith, fight, swagger, and hope have always mattered — that shift isn’t small.

Bill Green served on Philadelphia City Council from 2008-2014, and as Chair of the School Reform Commission from 2014-2015.

The Citizen welcomes guest commentary from community members who represent that it is their own work and their own opinion based on true facts that they know firsthand.

MORE ON THE MAYOR